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(How) to read or what to read… that is the question

The ‘Digital’ (as a vast overgeneralisation) is changing the literary sphere at every level: publishing processes, notions of authorship and authority, books as consumer objects, marketing infrastructures mediating author–reader relations. Murray’s account of an expanded ecology of paratexts, that today we can further expand to Substack newsletters, BookTok, reading logging apps, presents literary valuation as produced in a liminal zone. Reading itself is altered both practically and culturally, from how we engage with texts to how we choose what to read from this “endless list”. Questions that these authors are considering 10 to 20 years ago, expand and persist. In 2026, I find there to be an increasing scepticism around social media, and so now we see an age in which reading seems to reaffirm itself as a status symbol – becoming almost a sign of a successful ‘escape’ from the digital. The image of the ‘performative male’ with a paperback in a trouser pocket comes to mind, which I think illustrates nicely how the physical book has gained a sort of aura. It can be a bit of a contentious archetype on many levels but relevant here for its irony as a trope intrinsically associated with the media yet it seeming to claim rejection of. It draws parallels with our discussion about design decisions and Daisy’s example of the Fitzcarralo editions that to me exude a similar aesthetic of intellectualism. I could yap on about the Fitzcarralo book covers and the significance of Yves Klein Blue, but for the purpose of this post, it’s a design strategy that seems to represent the publisher trying to articulate their role as merit evaluator. In the context of Murray’s observation that the digital literary sphere erodes the traditional gatekeeper role of the publisher, Fitzcarralo perhaps is using colour as a beacon to grasp at this authority of cultural arbiter, a role that is more diversified in the digital literary sphere.

Hayles’ analysis of reading practices in the digital age anticipates anxieties of attention fragmentation that have only intensified the following 15 years. I found her article initially unsettling precisely because it feels prescient, but ultimately Hayles seems to offer a way of thinking through this without nostalgia or technophobia. Insisting that close, hyper and machine reading function best in relation and conjunction with each other another reframes the ‘problem’ of reading as one of transfer rather than decline. The issue of cognitive overload should make us more conscious of mobilising different types of reading deliberately. 

There seems a theme across Hayles, Murray, and Wright’s essays of how we assert our own agency as readers and scholars in this digital literary sphere. The optimistic takeaway from each is that we have the capacity to be more conscious in reading: both attending to the practice of how we read and how we choose what we read in a world where we will most certainly never be able to read everything. This autonomy is largely undermined though by the fallacy of consumer choice. Wright’s study of list culture describes how consumers are assigned the role of arbiter, but really this is heavily rhetorical, contextualised by the actual functioning of the bestseller-list’s own action in the book world as active marketer, not just consumer record – ‘the list’ in this way takes over this role of arbiter from readers without us even realising it. The reader might be able to gain this ‘meriting’ stance in other ways enabled by the digital sphere through virtual social engagement over texts. 

Texts mentioned: 
Hayles, N. Katherine. ‘How We Read: Close, Hyper, Machine’. ADE Bulletin, vol. 150, 2010, pp. 62–79.
Murray, Simone. ‘Charting the Digital Literary Sphere’. Contemporary Literature, vol. 56, no. 2, 2015, pp. 311–339.
Wright, David. ‘Literary Taste and List-Culture in a Time of “Endless Choice”’. From Codex to Hypertext: Reading at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century, edited by Anouk Lang, University of Massachusetts Press, 2012, pp. 108–23. 

Who decides what books should be published?

An aspect from this week’s readings that stuck with me was the tension between understanding why readers choose the books they do and how those choices influence the publishing and publicity of texts. Long (via Wright) espouses that the individual book-selection process is mysterious; yet, within the same discussion, Wright argues that writers and publishing companies tend to produce books by following the public’s reading patterns rather than shaping the market themselves. This presents an interesting dynamic where book selection and reception operates on some hidden or unknowable logic, whilst publishing companies nevertheless try to track and follow it. From a monetary perspective, this raises questions about how valuable such insight into reader behaviour would be for publishers, and how heavily it already influences their decision-making.

This dynamic is clearly visible in the influence of social media platforms such as BookTok or Bookstagram, which have moved beyond popularising specific books to promoting trivial aspects of texts. Indeed, tropes such as ‘enemies to lovers’ or the ‘one bed, two characters’ scenario are now used as marketing tools. Whilst these labels are arbitrary and highly reductive ways to classify and select books, they are nonetheless widely adopted by authors who increasingly publicise their work under such headings on social media.

Moreover, bookshops such as Waterstones now feature dedicated BookTok sections, emphasising how thoroughly this reader-driven model of publication, which is fed by social media discussion, has become integrated into the offline literary world. This development provokes reflection on the authority of different endorsers, as we discussed in class. Whilst prizes or critical reviews of a book might allude towards its academic or creative accreditation, the prominence of BookTok sections in mainstream bookshops highlights the growing dominance of consumerism and monetary value within the literary world. Indeed, ordinary/amateur readers, mediated through social media platforms, increasingly function as a main authority determining which types of books receive more publishing opportunities, thereby skewing the publication market. 

In this context, perhaps the issue is less that ‘there will be more people writing books than reading them’ (Zaid via Wright), but more pressingly that the same narratives and tropes are being repeatedly reproduced. Indeed, if publishers continue to place value on arbitrary but marketable tropes over literary skill or critical acclaim, diversity of form and innovation within literature risks being marginalised. Therefore, whilst social media is a powerful tool for encouraging reading and promoting the modern literary market, it is worth questioning whether this comes at the expense of talented authors whose work may not appeal to the masses online, but nevertheless be valuable. 

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